Neil Bartlett: No Nobel for Noble Gases – Some Guesses Why - ACS

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Neil Bartlett: No Nobel for Noble Gases – Some Guesses Why Kathleen F. Edwards1 and Joel F. Liebman*,2 1Doctor

of Management Program, The Graduate School, University of Maryland University College, Largo, Maryland 20774, United States 2Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland 21250, United States *E-mail: [email protected].

In 1962, Neil Bartlett reported the synthesis of [O2]+ [PtF6]-, prepared first unintentionally and then by the reaction of O2 with PtF6. With the realization that the ionization potential of O2 and Xe were nearly identical, he soon afterwards combined Xe and PtF6 with the expectation of forming Xe+ [PtF6]-. A chemical reaction, beautiful, simple-minded and remarkable, ensued – noble gases were reactive. Inert gases were not inert! A fundamental rule of chemical behavior was shown to be incorrect. After Bartlett published a brief description of this phenomenon, numerous publications from many laboratories in many nations reporting other reactions of Xe, and also those of Kr and Rn appeared in the literature. Reasons were given for this newly observed reactivity. A variety of noble gas containing compounds was synthesized and characterized. Was Bartlett’s finding not remarkable? Was it not Nobel Prize worthy? In fact, Bartlett did not win the Nobel Prize that year, the next or any other year. Why not? Multiple reasons for this nonaward – chemical, psychological, sociological – are suggested in our current paper.

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Introduction Popular scientific history recounts the following set of events. In 1962, Neil Bartlett, a young assistant professor, reported the synthesis of solid [O2]+[PtF6]-, first by an unintended reaction involving a mixture of oxides and fluorides (1), and soon thereafter by the intentional direct reaction of gaseous O2 and PtF6 (2). Bartlett had just gained the awareness that O2 can thus be chemically ionized, i.e., it can be oxidized. He also recognized that the removal of an electron from O2 requires nearly the identical amount of energy as to remove an electron from Xe: their ionization potentials are nearly equal, IP(O2) ≈ IP(Xe) ≈ 12.2 eV ≈ 1170 kJ mol-1. Accordingly, the successful electron transfer reaction of O2and PtF6 suggested that Xe and PtF6 should likewise react. In other words, since [O2]+[PtF6]-could readily be formed by the reaction of the two gases, so should the related [Xe]+[PtF6]- (3), be formed wherein Xe was the reductant. This argument that Xe should react with PtF6 was strengthened upon realization of the calculated nearly identical lattice energies of the two [PtF6]- salts, one synthesized but a few months before and the other increasingly plausible. This Xe/PtF6 reaction was successful, meaning that the result was easily affirmed by changes of color, phase, and the physical properties of the product from those of its starting materials. Whatever be the precise product of this “beautiful experiment” (4), whether it be written as the salt “xenon hexafluoroplatinate”, [Xe]+[PtF6]- or as the nonstoichiometric compound Xe[PtF6]n, (1 ≤ n ≤ 2 ) it was unambiguous that xenon “enjoyed” reaction chemistry and was definitely not inert (5). The inertness of xenon, and plausibly that of its vertical neighbors in the periodic table, the other noble gases, was no longer an inviolate truism. Indeed, as a result of Bartlett’s research, a trusted tenet of chemists’ faith and understanding of all of molecular science, the octet rule and all of its research and pedagogical corollaries, was not inviolate. The erstwhile used expressions “rare gas” and “noble gas” for xenon and its vertical neighbors survived and became ever more part of the chemist’s vocabulary, while the expression “inert gas” rapidly became at best a faulty anachronism. The neologism “aerogen” was soon introduced (6), to accompany “halogen,” “chalcogen” and “pnicogen” to collectively describe the group 8 elements accompanying the reactive, chemically significant groups 7, 6 and 5 found to their left in the periodic table. The group 8 elements no longer interpolated mutely the highly electronegative, group 7 halogens with the highly electropositive group 1, the alkali metals, found in the following row. A new field of chemistry blossomed (7, 8). For this spectacular finding and its related outcomes, would not a Nobel Prize for Bartlett soon be forthcoming? We may recount the above as a legend, as part of the folklore of our discipline that speaks of Bartlett and his accomplishment. There was a young commoner, a newly minted chemistry Ph.D. from a respected but not the premier national university. For unstated reasons, he crossed the ocean and then crossed the continent in which he landed before settling, again, at a respected but not the premier national university. He started his academic career, and had but few coworkers. His early endeavor (1, 2), was with one coworker and started from an accidental discovery then published in journals from where he had emigrated. The seminal study (3), that heralded his name made use of simple, elegant, easily 262 Strom and Mainz; The Posthumous Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Volume 1. Correcting the Errors and Oversights of the Nobel ... ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2017.

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understood logic and also the absolutely fortuitous, near arithmetic equality of two chemical quantities. The experimental study involved a one-step synthesis from two reagents, easily visually and unequivocally confirmed, and required one investigator and one piece of equipment in its execution. A premier journal was selected for publication of this singular finding, but no editorial reply was received over a month period. So rebuked by the establishment, the youngster then submitted his finding to the same journal as his earlier work. The study was accepted, appeared in print and soon there was a flood of publications by others on related science from a great number of institutions from many nations. Several questions may be asked. One may ask about the month wait. And why did the youngster submit the paper to journals in his “old country”, rather than the less prestigious national journal of his new home? Was information about his finding unofficially leaked lessening its novelty and specialness? And, why did the commoner not become a Nobelist? (See Figure 1)

Figure 1. Neil Bartlett at the blackboard. Photo courtesy of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. We reiterate the question, why did Neil Bartlett not win the Nobel Prize for his discovery of the first compound of the noble gases and the conceptual chemical revolution associated with this finding? 263 Strom and Mainz; The Posthumous Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Volume 1. Correcting the Errors and Oversights of the Nobel ... ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2017.

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Xenon Hexafluoroplatinate and Binary Xenon Fluorides By the time the neologism “aerogen” was suggested, however, much new chemistry was predicted for xenon and the other group 8 elements. Much new chemistry had already appeared in the primary experimental literature that had been reported for these elements. Among this new chemistry were the most conceptually simple, no less iconoclastic, findings. Most notable among these results was the synthesis of the binary fluoride XeF4 (9, 10), and soon after, that of XeF2 (11, 12), and XeF6 (13, 14), and those of compounds of krypton (15, 16), and radon rapidly followed (17). However recent the initial primary discoveries, reviews of this new discipline – noble gas chemistry – soon followed. There was a major conference in 1963 and an early researcher, Hyman, quickly edited and published a volume largely based on the talks from this meeting. ((18), also see (19)) This new discipline also was ready to enter the undergraduate chemistry curriculum, reminiscent perhaps of how Sputnik had impacted the studies of physics and engineering. As authors of the current paper, we inadequately know by how much and what was told to the students but only to their professors, e.g., refs. (20, 21). However, we wish to note that one of the authors (JFL) of this current chapter was first introduced to noble gas chemistry – explicitly Bartlett’s initial results, reasoning and research – in his freshman Chemistry 1 honors course in the Fall of 1963 (22). This discussion excited him enough that noble gas chemistry became the topic of his Ph.D. thesis in 1970, as well as much of his lifelong continuing interest, research and scholastic activities, such as the current paper. And may we add, this enthusiasm was aided by Bartlett being his ancillary graduate school doctoral advisor (1967 – 69) and Hyman being prominent among his mentors during this author’s early professorial years as an increasingly autonomous scientist (1970 –73). The authors are perchance hearing a dull roar arising from their readers. We recognize there are so many nearly contemporaneous studies to Bartlett’s, and so many other participants to remember. And no doubt we as authors might well have forgotten or even intentionally left uncited some relevant studies. Bartlett’s name is prominent, however, but appears early and then disappears save some reviews (23, 24), and a safety warning by Bartlett based on personal experience (25), derived from his month-long hospitalization and what would turn out to be almost his lifelong blindness in one eye due to a laboratory explosion. Based on literature citations, however, it appears that noble gas chemistry became an active scientific discipline but the pioneer was not regarded as a participant, and more as a bystander and archivist. Or perhaps Bartlett was not the sole pioneer of this momentous discovery. The chemistry of noble gases (or the aerogens) was in the air. In either case, is Bartlett worthy of winning the Nobel Prize given that all of the involved researchers cannot win the prize together–if there are too many possible awardees to award all of them, none gets awarded? This question, if asked and so answered in the negative by the Nobel Prize would explain Bartlett’s never winning the award (26). Were there too many investigators of noble gas compounds to preclude any winning the Nobel Prize – three is the generally accepted maximum number of awardees. And 264 Strom and Mainz; The Posthumous Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Volume 1. Correcting the Errors and Oversights of the Nobel ... ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2017.

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yet, chronologically was not he the first, and should he not win the award as he won the race, by being the first to cross the finishing line (27)? Like so many disciplines in which the practitioners are rushed and pushed by competition, both ego and enthusiasm, there were errors made by other researchers in explanations given for observed phenomena and in their conceptual understanding. Among these were early claims of XeF8 (28), of KrF4 (29), and its corresponding acid and salt (30), and for that matter the stoichiometry of a highly explosive xenon oxide, hydroxide or oxyhydroxide (25). There were early claims, now approaching a century old, for the synthesis and characterization of stable metal helium compounds such as HgHe (31), – this finding was “corrected” to suggest this binary species had the stoichiometry HgHe10 (32). Rather much earlier were claims, unsubstantiated but also unrefuted, of argonides in ordinary rocks (33); and much more recently neonides (and kryptonides and xenonides) were posited (34, 35). Dare we include Bartlett’s claim of a xenon hexafluoroplatinate as a more modern example of an unsubstantiated, or at least, misidentified species? If we do – and some on the Nobel Prize awards committee might have – then Bartlett’s study of noble gas compounds is no longer singularly noteworthy or perchance noteworthy at all. We conjecture that Bartlett’s multiyear referring to his original species as a [PtF6]- salt containing cationic xenon (Xe+, more likely than Xe2+) could be interpreted as either mistaken judgment or undue arrogance, neither of which would have encouraged the Nobel committee to vote in his favor. We may parenthetically interject the facetious question of one of the authors (JFL) of Hyman, already cited as an early primary researcher and archivist (17–20), whether the name of his institution, “Argonne National Laboratory” was in any way connected to argon, the noble gas element that is a quite abundant (~1%) component of air. Needless to say, the answer was given in the negative (36), – it was only years later that the first argon-containing species, HArF, was first isolated in a solid (37). However, since this finding referred to a matrix isolated species only isolated under cryogenic conditions rather than bulk material such as the isolable, indeed crystallographically characterizable, solid calcium chloride hydride HCaCl (38), it may be asked if HArF is truly a compound of argon. (And dare we ask the same question about the isomeric ArHF that was observed as a gas phase species (39)?

Prehistory of Noble Gas Compounds Other contradictory, if not cynical, questions and answers for Bartlett’s nonaward may also be given, many of which relate to the aforementioned question of what defines a compound, and to the question of what defines a successful experimental result. As part of a comprehensive paper on oxyacids and their salts, Pauling suggested in 1933 that Xe(VIII) should be stable as H4XeO6, Ag4XeO6 and AgH3XeO6 (40), and therefore inferred the possible stability of suitable xenon compounds, without acknowledging the just earlier experimental studies of possible noble gas halides by Antropoff (41, 42), Ruff (43), and their respective coworkers. One of Pauling’s colleagues, Yost, and a student thereof, Kaye, soon 265 Strom and Mainz; The Posthumous Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Volume 1. Correcting the Errors and Oversights of the Nobel ... ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2017.

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thereafter attempted the synthesis of xenon, and krypton, fluoride and chloride (44), – interestingly, this study was nearly contemporaneous with Bartlett’s birth. It is a source of some disagreement how much Yost was influenced by Pauling’s suggestion (45). Pauling’s suggestion was but a few lines long and Yost and Kaye’s publication was long if defined by the normal non-acceptance of negative results (zero lines long) but was otherwise quite short and incomplete (44). However, it is clear that noble gas compounds were viewed as plausible at that earlier time and that Yost and Kaye had a near miss as had von Antropoff and Ruff given that Pauling realized that the species that violated the octet rule, were entirely reasonable. Indeed, many such compounds were already known, although many of his peers and those who came afterwards viewed all of this as documentation of the dogma – noble gas compounds do not, and cannot, exist. If one takes a more optimistically open view, then Yost and Kaye could be said to have “failed” but presaged the rich chemistry of xenon in which Bartlett and so many others participated. Once again, Bartlett’s finding was not held to be particularly chemically special, although with its earliest formulation as xenon hexafluoroplatinate once conceptually a different class of compounds, and so it was unique and Nobel worthy. The vast majority of other xenon compounds were all precedented by those of antimony and many other metalloids and nonmetals, and so all of these findings – or none – were Nobel worthy. It may be suggested that noble gas compounds were normal, that they were well-understood in terms of other metalloid and nonmetal species as noted, in refs. (46–49) and many times since. However, this fails to explain why the octet rule was viewed by so many as so seemingly inviolate when even simple, century known species such as PCl5, SF6 (and even H3PO4 and H2SO4, and their salts) when drawn with phosphorus and sulfur-oxygen double bonds) were similarly conceptually dismaying. (To escape the problem for “classical” species, additional symbols occasionally appeared in molecular formulae, e.g. PCl5 was occasionally written as PCl3 • Cl2 and S=O was occasionally replaced by S→O.) In any case, refs. (46–49) have not been particularly cited by others. This implies that the scientific community was not ready for noble gas compounds, that the chemical rules that tolerated “octet expansion” for phosphorus and sulfur and antimony could not be applied to xenon and the other noble gases, and that these elements were unchemical. However, they were still worthy of studies resulting in primary publications and doctoral degrees. For example, Allen of ref. (46), was the thesis advisor of one of the authors (JFL) of this chapter in 1970, (ref. (50)) and of several others before him in the mid 1960’s, cf. refs. (51) and (52). Conversely, it could be argued that noble gas compounds were too normal. In any case, many papers through the last half-century still relate noble gas compounds generally to those of the halogens, and indeed the authors note the radiochemical, almost alchemical, transformation of [ICl2]- to XeCl2 by the transmutation of iodine to form xenon (53). (cf. the unsuccessful and successful chemical syntheses of xenon chlorides from the elements, refs. (44) and (54), respectively.) How much did this perceived, but perchance only after-the-fact, normalcy of xenon and its compounds deny the Nobel Prize to Bartlett? After all, such normalcy could relegate noble gas chemistry to mere examples of nonmetal, and so necessarily main group inorganic compounds, and thereby to a relatively 266

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ignored topic in the upper level undergraduate/early graduate school curriculum and in the primary research journals. Let truth be told, one of the authors (JFL) has no course in inorganic chemistry on his transcripts. There are yet other possible contributions to this Nobel Prize denial. Most of the earlier studies of noble gas compounds dealt with those species containing xenon. Xenon was a particularly rare and hence expensive species, thereby lessening what was admittedly an outpouring of scientific popularity, curiosity and research activity. Bartlett’s early experiment, so briefly described in ref. (1), was labelled one of the ten most beautiful in the history of chemistry, although it was labelled “simple-minded” as well. (See Ball, ref. (4), for both descriptors.) How many elements have enjoyed such a high level of research activity? It is perhaps disingenuous to answer carbon because it is found in all organic compounds. Fluorine is another one such element and indeed, xenon chemistry was almost inseparable from that of fluorine. Bartlett’s use of the highly expensive, simultaneously also highly rare and noble metal platinum added to the inherent esoterism, if not almost irrelevance, of his finding compared to the use of elemental fluorine by most other researchers. Bartlett’s experiment was simultaneously too easy – a one-step mixing of starting materials and visual proof of reaction – and too difficult.

Fluorine and High Oxidation States The most general use of F2, very often accompanied by that of HF, was also not for amateurs – not for college students in early courses wishing to emulate or even watch their professors in the laboratory. One of the current paper’s authors almost mournfully inquires how many of his freshman chemistry peers, and indeed classmates, were as inspired as he was by the chalkboard/theoretical discussion of XePtF6 outlined earlier. ((22), also see ref. (20).) No doubt, it has been asked not uncommonly if had oxygen or chlorine been as reactive as fluorine, had the highly abundant argon or perchance helium been as reactive as xenon, had the experiments been easier and more convenient to perform, had radon not been radioactive and even rarer, would not have noble gas chemistry have begun many decades before? We note, for example, the highest oxidation state for xenon – shared with osmium, iridium and ruthenium, and so far for any element in any isolable compound – is +8 found in the oxide, XeO4, conveniently formed by acidification of [XeO6]4- salts (55), these +8 species in turn derived from the basic disproportionation/hydrolysis of the lower valence Xe(VI)-containing XeF6 (56). It is well-established that XeO4 is explosively unstable relative to the elements (57), as is XeO3 (likewise hydrolytically obtainable from XeF4 as well as from XeF6, e.g., refs. (58, 59)). There are other binary inorganic compounds unstable relative to their elements such as some of the isolable nitrogen oxides, NO, NO2 and N2O and all of the isolable chlorine oxides, Cl2O, ClO2 and Cl2O7 (60). However, few species are so easily and unintentionally detonated (25, 61), and thereby lessen their “popularity” with the scientific community at large, and presumably also with the Nobel Prize committee. (We now acknowledge the 267

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suggested presence of Ir(IX) in a gas phase ion, both as a free species [IrO4]+ and complexed with one or more argon atoms and now ask whether the latter ion-molecule complexes so qualify as noble gas species containing argon (62)? We will return to such complexes later.)

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Gas-Phase Ions Containing Noble Gases We now note yet another possible obstacle to Bartlett’s being awarded the Nobel Prize. Again, straddling the year of Bartlett’s birth, Pauling (63, 64), presented a quantum mechanical explanation for the existence of [He2]+, accompanied by those of [He2]2+ and excited states of neutral He2. [He2]+ is experimentally known and is an archetype of gas phase species of the type [Ng2]+ and [NgNg’]+ wherein Ng, Ng’ = He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe (65, 66), all known from these studies save the He, Xe pair and even this seemingly hexed species [HeXe]+ was observed some decades later (67). (We note that [He2]2+ has also been observed (68), as has [HeAr]2+ as have many other [NgNg’]2+ ions (69)). Are these ions not compounds of the noble gases and thereby Bartlett’s finding was long predated? Are ions ever compounds? Are we bothered more by these species a) lacking a counterion or b) not isolated as salts. Are we most concerned that the heteronuclear ions seemingly have negative bond energies and are unstable relative to their constituents? Whatever be the reason, we are doubtful that most chemists identified these species as noble gas compounds, and so Bartlett’s paper was not “scooped” by studies announcing their existence. As authors, we must be honest – should these ions be considered as compounds and we in fact believe they should be, Bartlett was not the first in making noble gas compounds. This ambiguity as to ion vs. neutral pervaded one of the author’s (J. F. L.) professional career. His first published paper (in 1969, ref. (70)) was a theoretical, quantum chemical, study of [ArF]+ and 20 years later saw another much higher calculational level, more credible study coauthored by him with Bartlett (71). The prediction of a stable gas phase [ArF]+ ion was realized using gas phase ion-neutral reactions (72), but no corresponding salt or even ionic solution has yet been reported with this cation. We repeat the question “is [ArF]+ a compound?” What about the aforementioned [Ng2]+ and [NgNg’]+ species? The green ion, [Xe2]+, is well-characterized (73, 74), in solution and more recently has been isolated as a salt (75), – indeed, relatedly, so has the blue [Xe4]+ in solution (76). Are these ions “compounds,” or should we use this last word for their solid salts or maybe solutions? (There is some ambiguity in this last question – we note a gas phase study of [Xen]+ ions, 3 ≤ n ≤ 30, which explicitly refers to [Xe3]+ and its solvation by Xe (77). We close with related questions about protonated noble gases, [NgH]+ Ng = He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe (78, 79)? In all cases there is a respectable bond energy – the recommended He – H+ bond energy of [HeH]+ is 178 kJ mol-1 (79), comparable to the F-F bond in F2 (80), and the Xe-F bond in [XeF]+ (81). Again, we ask: Are these ions compounds? [XeH]+ has been suggested in HF/SbF5 solution (82), – so does it follow that we should anticipate [SbF6]- or [Sb2F11]- salts? CO2 was likewise plausibly protonated in HF/SbF5 solution (82), and forms [H(CO2)2]+ (but 268 Strom and Mainz; The Posthumous Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Volume 1. Correcting the Errors and Oversights of the Nobel ... ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2017.

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not [CO2H]+) in the solid phase with the very much stronger acid H[CHB11F11] (83). What about the formation of [XeH]+ and [Xe2H]+ – since the latter ion has been observed in low temperature matrices of Kr, Xe and H2? ((84–86), respectively.) Does the existence of these ions in whatever phase strengthen or weaken the case that Bartlett was doing Nobel Prize winning work with his noble gases? Are either [XeH]+ and/or [Xe2H]+ noble gas compounds? Does their existence make Bartlett’s XePtF6 even more glorious as an archetype of chemical compounds of the noble gases? Or is it merely one of many such species that may be identified as a nonmetal-containing compound, or even a salt with a nonmetallic cation? Or perchance, not even a compound since it is not clearly identified and characterized as a pure species and so is reminiscent of many earlier studied species that just happen to have a noble gas. This multiple-choice question is both frustrating and subtle. Related to [NgH]+ are the methylated cations [CH3Ng]+ (87). The Ng = Ar, Kr and Xe species are rather well-understood in the gas phase with experimentally determined bond energies (Ar, Kr, Xe); (refs. (88–90)) respectively. No such data are known to us for the He and Ne counterparts save calculational theory (87). Consider now phenylated species, or arylated species in general. Note the ambiguity of the symbol Ar for aryl and for argon; let us use Arom for aromatic groups in this chapter. No Arom-Ng bond energy is seemingly known. On the other hand [C6F5-Xe]+ salts are quite stable in solution (91), and the solid phase (92). Now, these are unequivocally organo-xenon compounds. So, what are their bond energies? How do these values compare with those of other known species with Arom = (C6F5-, namely (C6F5)2Xe, C6F5I, [(C6F5)2I]+ and [(C6F5)2I]- from refs. (93–96) respectively. (We acknowledge now that it is only for C6F5I that these bond energy data are available from experiment (94).)

Clathrates Containing Noble Gases In a related but almost converse way we may ask about the stoichiometrically well-defined species, the solid hydroquinone-argon clathrate (HOC6H4OH)3 • Ar. It was referred to as “an inert-gas compound” (97), a self-contradictory description since the very existence of this species contradicted the inertness, the unwillingness to interact. Now, did its existence repudiate the idea of the inertness of the noble gases and so Bartlett’s discovery lacked true novelty? Or did the very stability of this clathrate legitimize viewing his compound as PtF6 • Xe, which in turn allowed for it not being necessarily stoichiometric? We note also that old verbal habits survive. For instance, we recall papers (and many others), in which isolable, stable noble gas halides are prominent in the text and the words “inert gas” are prominent in the title (98–100). There are also studies of other clathrates containing Ar, Kr and Xe in which these elements are called “inert gases”, (e.g. (97, 101),) “rare gases” (102), and “noble gases” (103). Why do we find three different words? “Inert” and “rare” are proper scientific words? And yet on the other hand, “noble” is more person-related, more anthropomorphic and anthropocentric. Does the choice of words depend at all on the user’s academic parentage, or the subdiscipline and community of the individual scientist (104)? 269

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Words and Coworkers We can almost forgive the above contradiction in the use of the word” inert” in some of the aforementioned papers since Bartlett’s discovery had been so recent. We are however, confused, bothered, and troubled by its later use in ref. (100) since the author was a recent coworker of Bartlett’s (105). The clathrate chemists, refs. (97, 101–103), can also perhaps be excused. It might be that this confusion as to the inertness or reactivity of xenon was sufficiently prevalent as to dissuade, however subconsciously, the Nobel Prize committee? We note that argon, krypton and xenon all form clathrates with phenol with binding energies of approximately. 40 kJ mol-1 (102). This is a quite small stabilization energy and the clathrates are experimentally found to be labile. Then we remember that the enthalpies of formation of KrF2 (106), XeO3 (58) and XeO4 (55), are all positive and the latter two species decompose in an explosive manner. No doubt this thermodynamic instability is also true for the lower oxides XeO and XeO2. While the former remains unknown in the condensed phase (107), we note that the latter has recently been isolated as seemingly a polymeric solid of reasonable kinetic stability and mild decomposition behavior (108). It may be noted the aforementioned paper (101), was also coauthored with a graduate student. Bartlett had few graduate students as found in his “Chemistry Tree” (109), an admittedly incomplete document since it only showed but one student from the University of British Columbia, and two from Berkeley, his university for the last several decades of his life, Is this because this Princeton-based student soon after the degree left chemistry altogether to become a corporate lawyer for a telecommunications company (110)? Is any of this information about academic progeny suggestive of potential distance between Bartlett and others in the chemical community, a bilateral alienation that might have hurt his chances of a Chemistry Nobel Prize? Was there one truly distanced individual, or maybe a pair, personally and professionally but barely related to him, who ordained that the vote for the honor would be down and not up, that the way to Stockholm would not, could not be travelled.

The Nobel Prize and Other Recognition We do not know, but wish to emphasize Bartlett’s other recognitions by the scientific community: numerous awards, elected fellow in academies and honorary degrees, 25, 12 and 9 respectively (111). We also note two poems that were written in his honor, one commemorating his 70th birthday and found as part of otherwise research article (112), and the other memorializing his life soon after his death (113). Bartlett was also awarded the Nobel Prize, if not in Chemistry, in a literary work (114). Bartlett has been described as gracious (115), and certainly not inactive although temporarily inactivated by a laboratory accident (cf. argon); hidden, occasionally but always diligently doing his science, sometimes alone in his laboratory (cf. krypton), not “different,” nor “foreign” although certainly not of Oxford or Cambridge (“Oxbridge”) descent, prestige, and pedigree (cf. xenon) to reference the etymology of the three just cited elements. One of the authors 270

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(JFL) recalls a meal shared with Bartlett at a major scientific meeting – with no one else asking to join us. Thinking about it now, the meal was reminiscent of the conversations he had with Bartlett as a graduate student: enjoyable, educational, non-hierarchical, respectful, generally uninterrupted by peers, professors or the cries of “wow” than when he was first introduced to noble gas compounds. This is perhaps a good metaphor for Bartlett is found in the binary xenon fluorides and the product of the xenon/platinum hexafluoride reaction. The former species are stable and well-defined in terms of structure, energetics and stoichiometry. Yet their syntheses require sufficient activation energy for their formation more than simply mixing the two component gases, Xe and F2, under ambient conditions and resulting in but a mixture of the two starting gases. It takes added energy, added effort to form the compounds of interest, and so their successful syntheses waited until 1962 and 1963. The reaction of xenon and platinum hexafluoride reaction is facile but the product is less well-defined. First performed in 1962, it took many years to clarify what Bartlett had done. Bartlett’s first brief description in print, his seminal publication, remained unclarified, unexpanded, and inadequately explained for a few following years. This resulted in the Xe/PtF6 study widely cited as a harbinger but seemingly rarely as the immediate inspiration for future, directly related science. It seems to have suggested few new experiments. This attested to acknowledged difficulties, not laziness, by the scientific community. For example, consider the reaction of O3 with PtF6, first reported 35 years after (116), the reaction of O2 (1, 2), and of Xe (3), with PtF6. Quoting from ref. (116), the new reaction not uncommonly resulted in “broken glass accompanying broken hopes” and not trioxygenyl salts. Certainly safer, if not simpler, were studies of the reaction, or at least of the interaction, of xenon with metal hexafluorides other than PtF6. (e.g., (117, 118)) Relatedly, the desired monatomic cation from the reaction of Xe with PtF6 has remained hidden, at least to the chemical community interested in the condensed phase, solutions and/or solids. As mentioned earlier, by contrast, the [Xe2]+ and [Xe4]+ ions have been so found in the condensed phase. Now, what is the desired cation of which we speak, for which Bartlett related the near equal ionization potentials of atomic Xe and diatomic O2? From introductory chemistry courses, we may recall that the electron configuration of Xe is 1s22s22p63s23p63d104s24p64d105s25p6(1S), and, therefore, that of Xe+ is 1s22s22p63s23p63d104s24p64d10 5s25p5 (2P). Now, which of the 5p electrons has been ionized, px, py or pz? We may answer, any one of them because the three orbitals are equivalent, they have the same energy, they are degenerate. However, a more sophisticated understanding tells us that we should consider ionization to the spin-orbit split states, s2p5 2P3/2 and s2p5 2P1/2 and it is the former, more low-lying state that Bartlett sought. These two states differ in energy by 10537.01 cm-1 ≈ 1.306 eV ≈ 126 kJ mol-1 (119, 120). This difference is large enough to suggest that a different and perhaps difficult language is needed to understand Xe+, nearly the most simple of xenon-containing species. Certainly, this species will be strange – we recognize this energy difference quantity is comparable to that of the xenon-fluorine bonds in the binary fluorides, XeF2, XeF4 and XeF6 (121–125). 271

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So, let us briefly return to Bartlett’s initial suggestion of [Xe]+[PtF6]- as an isolable salt. Was [Xe]+ so distressing and so discouraging that many, indeed most, contemporary chemists refused to recognize and accept Bartlett’s finding even though monatomic Cl· and Br· valence isoelectronic with [Xe]+, populate the organic chemical literature in discussions of photochemical halogenation. Was it because [Xe]+ is a cation radical, or should we say a radical cation, and hence maybe a mass spectrometric fragment and not a component of an isolable species? Had Bartlett suggested the synthesis of a [Xe2]2+ salt, now reminiscent of molecular halogens and of mercurous but not dioxygenyl species, been any more acceptable, any more Nobel worthy? Or was Bartlett, among many others, prescient – the reader may recall our earlier mention of gas phase [NgNg’] 2+ cations and now we acknowledge that [Xe2]2+ is notable for its absence. We remember the quote “There is no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion (126).” Now we dare to rephrase it by saying “There is no excellent science that hath not some strangeness in the proportion.” It seems clear to us that Bartlett’s reasoning was exquisite and the compound he discovered strange. However, it was deemed apparently not worthy of a Nobel Prize as defined by the awarding committee, even though we endeavor to understand and wish to remediate that decision now.

Thoughts on the Nobel Prize and the Decision Process Let us end our chapter with a brief discussion about the role of the Nobel Prize awarding committee and its associated process, where all information about the process and proceedings is taken from a single source (127). By decree, Nobel Prize deliberations and associated matters cannot be discussed for the 50 years subsequent to a nomination, before any information after 1965 is necessarily in the realm of conjecture, and so our analysis here can only relate to deliberations for the 1963, 1964 and 1965 Prizes. Using information from ref. (127) and from, either alone (1963) or with Claassen, Selig and Malm (1964, 1965) and Hoppe (1965), Bartlett was nominated 14 times by the following persons: in 1963, McDowell; 1964, Dole, Giguère, Gübeli, Ourisson; 1965, Cunningham, Greenwood, Jolly, Klemm, Libby, Marion, Pimentel, and Segrè, recognizing two individuals, Libby and Segrè, as Nobelists themselves. The respect and recognition for Bartlett from such assembled scientific excellence is notable. Sadly, we must ask why was it not Noble-worthy by the decision process of the Nobel committee? In each of these three years, 1963, 1964, and 1965, there were numerous nominations of other Nobel contenders. Consider now whom the Nobel committee chose for those years: Ziegler and Natta for 1963, Crowfoot Hodgkin for 1964, and Woodward for 1965. All four of these Nobelists studied large chemical species (hundreds to thousands of atoms) of well-defined structures including exquisite stereochemical complications of considerable scientific and societal importance (128–131). None of the pioneering noble gas compounds studied by Bartlett had more than eight atoms and, as noted above, Bartlett had even misidentified his species (nonetheless, we still suggest that Bartlett was the first to synthesize a noble 272

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gas compound, as conventionally defined). We admit that Ziegler and Natta, Crowfoot Hodgkin, and Woodward entered the scientific scene at least a decade before Bartlett. And, perhaps as a consequence, these individuals had many more nominations (including those from prior Nobelists) because they were already scientifically established (Ziegler and Natta, received 32 and 44 nominations, respectively; Crowfoot Hodgkin, 44 nominations; Woodward, 111 nominations). We note that the two individuals who supported Bartlett who were Nobelists themselves had received ca. 30 nominations apiece for their achievements. As was said above, our analysis could not go beyond 1965 and so we cannot have knowledge of whether, and how many, additional Nobel nominations Bartlett may have received. Conjecture, therefore, is futile. It may also be noted that the various species studied by Ziegler, Natta, Crowfoot Hodgkin, and Woodward obeyed the classical rules of valence and chemical behavior, while the noble gas species of Bartlett and the other earlier noble gas researchers (i.e., Claassen, Selig, Malm, and Hoppe) expanded the fundamental understanding of our science, meaning that established rules were challenged and indeed overthrown by these Nobel recipients. A final consideration as to why Neil Bartlett’s work did not earn him the coveted Nobel Prize may seem reminiscent to readers who have ever been nominated for or applied for a special honor. Bartlett’s non award status may also be familiar to those who have served, as have this chapter’s authors, on “secret” decision making panels where prizes or awards for excellence were being given. These panelists are challenged by a variety of conflicts, often due to the richness of the candidates being considered. So many worthy candidates, so many criteria to employ, so few awards, so many individuals perhaps to disappoint. A fortiori, the Nobel Prize award process is even more enigmatic since it speaks to even greater recognition and reward than the numerous other scientific accolades Bartlett received through the decades. Despite our analysis (or perhaps partially because of our analysis), the reader may well be among the disappointed at Bartlett’s lack of Nobel recognition. As authors of this study, we share these sentiments. There was one additional option, seemingly unexplored and certainly not realized. Bartlett could have been paired for the award, but not with Claassen, Selig, Malm or with Hoppe who were nearly contemporaneous with their xenon-containing compounds. This alternative would have seen Bartlett as a coawardee with any of the 1963 – 5 Chemistry Nobelists, Ziegler and Natta, Crowfoot Hodgkin, or Woodward. How so – are not these others in too different areas of chemistry? We argue not so. Ziegler and Natta transformed some organic species as gases into crystalline polymeric solids. Bartlett transformed some inorganic species into noncrystalline solids. Crowfoot Hodgkin documented how the octet rule obeying 1st row elements could combine to form compounds of compositional complexity, structural splendor and powerful biological activity. Bartlett formed species of previously unheralded composition using elements from around the periodic table but only needing a dozen or so atoms per formula unit. Woodward’s compounds likewise showed splendor, complexity and activity, requiring multiple synthetic steps, identification and purification, and a large international team of senior scientists and students alike. Bartlett’s early publications (1, 2), had but one coworker; 273

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his ground-breaking study (3), that plausibly marks the beginning of noble gas chemistry and his Nobel Prize winning work was done alone as a well-reasoned one-step reaction. Now, would not any of these posited awards to Bartlett and the recognized awardee document the delicious diversity, and unity, of our discipline?

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